anna bell creteed a club in the basement which featured live jazz. there's a saxophonist, an excellent saxophonist, named joe mcqueen, who is still living in ogden. he got here in 194 5. he and anna bell weekly teamed up to create the jazz club that game a sensation. -- became a sensation. it had the beneficial effect of integrating ogden. >> 25th street flourished for a century. when railroad passengers started to decline after world war ii, especially in the 1950s, as they were building the interstate highway system so people could travel more easily by cars or go by airline, which was faster than trains. then the railroad passenger service started dying out. and by the late '60s it was pretty much all gone. 25th street today in 2514, looks a lot better than it did, say, at its low point in the 1970s. the buildings, if you see pictures of them from the mid-1970s, looked just horrid. in terrible condition. many of them had been abandoned for years. but to be on, that's why they're still here. they were hiding in plain sight. they weren't desirable,